Upon reading the article my jaw nearly hit my desk when I read the following:

"The Nevada Supreme Court makes it perfectly clear that the mere perception of danger, as opposed to actual danger, is sufficient to warrant a
killing in self-defense," he said.

At the risk of sounding way too pedestrian... What the bloody Hell man???? Seriously???

A bit of backstory is included in the article. It seems that a disabled Gulf War Veteran refused to get out of his car during a police stop that
resulted in a one hour "standoff" - a phrasing I find very suspect as the article clearly states that the suspect was unarmed. While I do understand
that the police on the scene probably did not have any ability to know if Mr Gibson ( the Veteran ) was armed or not - but they seem to have had
access to some very telling information that, by all rights, should have colored their behavior in this situation.

Mr Gibson, as they were well aware, had severe psychiatric issues - and they were very well aware of them as this snippet demonstrates:

The decision not to prosecute followed a grand jury decision last year not to indict officers in the shooting, and referred to information made
public in a February proceeding that replaced formal coroner's inquests of police slaying cases. Police had multiple contacts with Gibson, who
suffered from severe anxiety and depression, in the 36 hours before the fatal encounter.

The article explains that Mr Gibson was shot when one officer fired a beanbag shot, in an attempt to break the car window - and another officer
mistook that discharge for hostile fire and opened up with his own weapon - described as "an assault-style rifle" in the article.

This story, IMO, is about as telling as it gets and addresses several issues that ATS'ers are already keenly aware of. It is a microcosm of most
everything we've been discussing of late - and includes all the buzz terms...

A reference to "assault" weapons.

Mental health issues

Abuse of power.

Governmental incompetency.

Officials seeming to be above the law and who remain unprosecuted and unpunished.

To be fair, Mr Gibson was revving his engine and burning his tires - a very provocative display given the situation. But, still, did such behavior
warrant stripping the man of all due process and an on site execution?

I find it deeply disturbing that an obvious and patent display of police incompetence is seemingly being written of as nothing more than an
unfortunate accident. This event was not unfortunate but unavoidable IMO - it was entirely avoidable and involved negligence on the part of the police
- negligence that I see as potentially criminal.

Imagine it... we live in a society where the police can not only murder us if they feel threatened... but in a society where another police officer
has the ability to create an excuse for pulling the trigger! Am I alone in seeing this as so rife with the potential for abuse as to be deeply, deeply
disconcerting?

This is a damning statement about how we treat our mentally ill in this country. A person in an obvious psychiatric crisis had multiple encounters
with law enforcement - over a 36 hour period - and wound up dead rather than being afforded mental health care.

I guess caskets and bullets are cheaper than a doctors time and a few pills....

This is an outrage to me.

edit on 4/11/13 by Hefficide because: I am the edit King - I have to edit everything.

In Nevada if a person kills another person, all they have to say is that they thought that they were in mortal danger? If there are no other witnesses
and the murderer plants a weapon on the now deceased person's body ... would they not go to jail?

Does this mean we can now shoot cops and use the legal defense of "I felt in imminent danger". He had a gun, was threatening, and I felt the cop
was a threat to my safety. By the legal rationale the cops are using anybody can shoot anybody and get away with it.

That is wrong in my opinion, mainly because an officer has sufficient training to know what a threat is... A visually identified threat should be the
protocol.

You know what else, as citizens you are legally allowed to defend yourself by use of force up to and including deadly force against an unlawful
arrest attempt by an officer.

I couldn't imagine being in that situation and wouldn't want to be, but thought it would be worth
sharing.

“An illegal arrest is an assault and battery. The person so attempted to be restrained of his liberty has the same right to use force in
defending himself as he would in repelling any other assault and battery.” (State v. Robinson, 145 ME. 77, 72 ATL. 260).

Total fear and obedience is the goal so that when all law enforcement is fully privatised it will be as proffitable as possible.

Theres been quite a few threads about the mentaly ill or disabled being executed by the police, is that because they're an easy target? No, its
because most people dont associate it with themselves, because they're not one of THEM, but the message of DONT MESS WITH THE COPS is well planted in
their minds.

Sorry Heff ... he was completely armed ... not with a gun as you and the source article rightfully point out [termed 'unarmed'] ... BUT he was armed
with a vehicle and himself plus whatever else may have come to hand.

Issues I noted that cropped up for me as I read the articles story ...

Officer Jesus Arevalo opened fire with an assault-style rifle believing that officers were under fire following a standoff with Stanley LaVon
Gibson that lasted for more than an hour in an apartment complex parking lot.

In fact, what Arevalo heard was another officer firing a beanbag shotgun to break a side window of Gibson's vehicle, which was pinned between two
police cruisers. Police had planned to inject pepper spray inside to force Gibson, to surrender.

Huh?

Seems like whoever was in charge of this situation didn't inform Officer Arevalo that using pepper spray was the plan of action! :shk:

But then again the article story does qualify that ...

The district attorney also cited what he called a breakdown in communication between police officers at a chaotic scene where Gibson
remained locked in his car, occasionally revving the engine and spinning the tires, sending acrid blue smoke billowing around the surrounding
two-story apartment buildings while police ordered people off their balconies.

"I believe that if the officers were presented with these same circumstances today we would have a different outcome," Wolfson said.

BUT that doesn't match with this part of the story as quoted above ...

Officer Jesus Arevalo opened fire with an assault-style rifle believing that officers were under fire following a standoff with Stanley LaVon
Gibson that lasted for more than an hour in an apartment complex parking lot.

So they are all in an apartment complex parking lot and not hooning around the streets and so it seems to me that this was somewhat contained
situation.

Don't cops have stopsticks? *** (see below)

Couldn't they have shot out the vehicles tyres?

Furthermore ...

Attorney Cal Potter, who represents Gibson's widow, Rondha Gibson, in a federal lawsuit against Arevalo, the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police
Department and several officers, said he never expected the district attorney would prosecute.

"When they come out with a formal report, it's always in defense of the police," Potter told The Associated Press. "I was always skeptical with the
grand jury, the dog and pony show that used to be the coroner's inquest for the benefit of the press, and now news releases."

Potter derided Wolfson's finding that Arevalo fired his weapon in self-defense or the defense of others.

"Unfortunately, the facts won't go away," the attorney said. "This isn't a self-defense case. There were civil rights violations. The only
justice that's going to come is in the federal courthouse, when we bring witnesses to show what actually occurred."

This lawyer just wants to get paid ok and its a civil issue not a criminal issue [so far].
For them, I would horridly assume,... it is more about the $$$ than justice.

Finally ***

Wolfson said he believed Las Vegas police have made needed policy and training changes after intense criticism of Gibson's killing, which came at
a time the department was being accused of too quickly and too often relying on deadly force.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Nevada and National Association for the Advancement of Colored People called for a federal Justice Department
investigation. Instead, officials from the federal Community Oriented Policing Services program conducted a review of departmental policies.

They issued a report last November calling for an "organizational transformation" to train officers to resolve crisis situations without firearms. The
COPS report also recommended that every officer and sergeant undergo de-escalation training in the use of non-lethal verbal commands, pepper spray,
"beanbag" shotgun rounds and Tasers before resorting to handguns, shotguns or military-style assault rifles.

What happened to stopsticks?

Personal Disclosure: That ^^^ is all just a smoke and cover pass the buck situation tar and feather Officer Arevalo [who will have to face a civil
trial for damages for his own actions] when his superior officer on the scene remains... unnamed!

A police spokesman, Officer Bill Cassell, said Thursday that department administrators "respect the process and appreciate the extensive review
and all the deliberation that went into" Wolfson's decision.

"We now as a department can go forward with the internal use-of-force review of this incident," Cassell said.

Arevalo has been on paid administrative leave since the shooting. His representatives with the Las Vegas Police Protective Association didn't
immediately respond to messages.

This whole subject is so disturbing...My God....how many kids are going to be sent into these maniac wars on "terror" loose thier minds...come home
to be shunned and murdered...if not physically, then emotionally....I don't think most people are capable of seeing that kind of horror without deep
injury to thier souls...the police involved in this nightmare did not use common sence, did not communicate when and why the beanbag was fired by
police.....and basically gunned down and murdered one of our "Heros"...makes me sick...

NRS 200.130 Bare fear insufficient to justify killing; reasonable fear required. A bare fear of any of the offenses mentioned in NRS
200.120, to prevent which the homicide is alleged to have been committed, shall not be sufficient to justify the killing. It must appear that the
circumstances were sufficient to excite the fears of a reasonable person and that the party killing really acted under the influence of those fears
and not in a spirit of revenge.

NRS 200.140 Justifiable homicide by public officer. Homicide is justifiable when committed by a public officer, or person acting under the
command and in the aid of the public officer, in the following cases:

1. In obedience to the judgment of a competent court.

2. When necessary to overcome actual resistance to the execution of the legal process, mandate or order of a court or officer, or in the
discharge of a legal duty.

3. When necessary:

(a) In retaking an escaped or rescued prisoner who has been committed, arrested for, or convicted of a felony;

(b) In attempting, by lawful ways or means, to apprehend or arrest a person; or

(c) In lawfully suppressing a riot or preserving the peace.

NRS 200.160 Additional cases of justifiable homicide. Homicide is also justifiable when committed:

1. In the lawful defense of the slayer, or his or her husband, wife, parent, child, brother or sister, or of any other person in his or her
presence or company, when there is reasonable ground to apprehend a design on the part of the person slain to commit a felony or to do some great
personal injury to the slayer or to any such person, and there is imminent danger of such design being accomplished; or

2. In the actual resistance of an attempt to commit a felony upon the slayer, in his or her presence, or upon or in a dwelling, or other place
of abode in which the slayer is. (Emphasis added, footnotes deleted)

I'm starting to wonder if the percentage of LEO's who are also vets has skyrocketed. That would explain the trigger-finger we've seen lately. Not
to mention if a vet has killed an innocent under orders, killing someone who seems threatening would seem more than justifiable.

Originally posted by kerazeesicko
Whats with all the surprise..does this also fall along the lines of gun owners?

I hear them say it constantly...you trespass or feel(perceived threat) danger I will kill.

So what is the diff?

The difference is a "percieved threat" is reasonable if someone breaks into your home or attacks you and others unprovoked....with the intent to cause
harm......in a recent thread there was a woman who HID with her young children, grabbed her gun, and called her husband who called police.....this guy
didn't give up, found her and her children, came at them with a crowbar, and she shot him......do you think this woman woke up and "wanted" to shoot
anyone? Infront of her Children?

This guy had mental problems, the police were aware of that, he never fired at them, or was even known to have a weapon...infact it was a mistake that
he was a "percieved threat" when police fired the beanbags and another cop opened fire and killed him......how big of a threat could this young man
have been, that "trained" police could not control this situation without deadly force ?

Originally posted by kerazeesicko
Whats with all the surprise..does this also fall along the lines of gun owners?

I hear them say it constantly...you trespass or feel(perceived threat) danger I will kill.

So what is the diff?

The difference is a "percieved threat" is reasonable if someone breaks into your home or attacks you and others unprovoked....with the intent to
cause harm......in a recent thread there was a woman who HID with her young children, grabbed her gun, and called her husband who called
police.....this guy didn't give up, found her and her children, came at them with a crowbar, and she shot him......do you think this woman woke up
and "wanted" to shoot anyone? Infront of her Children?

This guy had mental problems, the police were aware of that, he never fired at them, or was even known to have a weapon...infact it was a mistake that
he was a "percieved threat" when police fired the beanbags and another cop opened fire and killed him......how big of a threat could this young man
have been, that "trained" police could not control this situation without deadly force ?

edit on 12-4-2013 by MountainLaurel because: (no
reason given)

I guess that is the nub of it all, the "perceived threat" a cop out for all occasions or what, a sanitized solution to a problem, same thing really.
It seems that ultimately the rationale is to bend down to an officer of the law, no matter what. Even if there is no perceived threat, and if you are
a cheeky teenager, a cop can smash you in the face, if you are a cheeky autistic, or fragile-X teenager, a cop can smash you in the face, in a place
where his appointed job was to protect you. If you are a judge you can belt you daughter with profanity, and then come back and do it again, when you
might have thought the ordeal was all over. .....Have a nice day?

This content community relies on user-generated content from our member contributors. The opinions of our members are not those of site ownership who maintains strict editorial agnosticism and simply provides a collaborative venue for free expression.